ANTH 1012 Note Unit 3 Summary
ANTH 1012 Note Unit 3 Summary
ANTH 1012 Note Unit 3 Summary
Unit 3
Human Culture and Ties that Connect Society
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III. BASIC FEATURES OF CULTURE
1. Culture is learned
Culture is not transmitted genetically from parents to their children. Humans do not inherit
culture biologically or naturally. They acquire culture through situational learning (trial-and-
error) or social learning (through observation of others including parents, friends, and teachers).
Generally, humans learn culture through interaction in the social environment. More than any
other species, human beings rely for their survival on learned behavioral patterns. The process of
social interaction through which humans learn and acquire culture is called enculturation.
2. Culture is shared
For a thing, idea, or behavioral pattern is considered as ‘cultural’, it must have a shared meaning
by members of a social group or a society. Members of a given society must have shared
guidelines (values, norms, customs, celebrations, etc.) in order to work, live and interact
effectively. Members of a society would be unable to communicate and cooperate without shared
culture. The absence of shared culture would lead to confusion and disorder. Look as the
following two different points:
Culture includes shared practices, understandings, and guidelines such as values and
norms. This is what we noted in the above paragraph.
Cultural understandings are not shared equally by all members of a given society. Culture
is shared differently by men and women, old and young people, and the like. Let us take a
rural/peasant society as an example. Some members of the society may have a great deal
of knowledge related to agriculture; other may have rich knowledge regarding medical
practices; still others may have detailed knowledge related to religion and belief system.
3. Culture is symbolic
Symbolic thought is unique and crucial to humans, especially to learn cultural elements. A
symbol is something verbal or nonverbal, which has a shared meaning within a particular
language or culture. It stands for something else. There would be no obvious, natural, or
necessary connection between the symbol and the meaning attached to it. Symbols serve as
conceptual devises to communicate abstract ideas among member of a given society. Many
symbols are powerful and often trigger behaviors or emotional states. For example, the designs
and colors of the flags of different countries represent symbolic associations with abstract ideas
and concepts of nation, freedom etc.
Humans learn most of their behaviors and concepts through symbolic learning. Humans have a
unique capability related to symbolic learning: a good example is our linguistic capability
(language is a complex system of symbols).
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4. Culture is all-encompassing
Culture encompasses all aspects, which affect people in their everyday lives. Culture comprises
countless material and non-material aspects of human lives. Thus, when we talk about a
particular people’s culture, we are referring to all of its material objects, ideas, activities and
festivities. Culture is the sum total of human creation: intellectual, technical, artistic, physical,
and moral. Culture is a complex pattern of living that directs human social life.
5. Culture is integrated
Cultures are not haphazard collections of customs and beliefs. We need to understand cultures as
integrated wholes, the parts of which are interconnected with one another. When we view
cultures as integrated systems, we can begin to see how particular culture traits fit into the whole
system and, consequently, how they tend to make sense within that context. A culture is an
integrated system; change in one aspect of culture will likely generate changes in other aspects of
the same culture. For example, change in production technology may bring change in life styles
of the society.
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IV. ASPECTS/ELEMENTS OF CULTURE
1. Material culture
Material culture consists of human-made objects such as tools, implements, furniture,
automobiles, buildings, dams, roads, bridges, and in fact, the physical substance which has been
changed and used by man. It is concerned with the external, mechanical and utilitarian objects. It
includes technical and material equipment. It is referred to as civilization.
2. Non-material culture
Non-material culture consists of the words the people use or the language they speak, the beliefs
they hold, values and virtues they cherish, habits they follow, rituals and practices that they do
and the ceremonies they observe. It also includes our customs, attitudes, world views, and our
ways of acting, feeling and thinking. Some of the aspects of non-material culture are listed as
follows:
Values are the standards by which members of a society define what is good or bad,
beautiful or ugly. Every society develops both values and expectations regarding the right way to
reflect them. Values are a central aspect of the non-material culture of a society and are
important because they influence the behavior of the members of a society.
Beliefs are cultural conventions that concern true or false assumptions, specific
descriptions of the nature of the universe and humanity’s place in it. Values are generalized
notions of what is good and bad; beliefs are more specific and, in form at least, have more
content. “Education is good” is a fundamental value in American society, whereas “Grading is
the best way to evaluate students” is a belief that reflects assumptions about the most appropriate
way to determine educational achievement.
Norms are shared rules or guidelines that define how people “ought” to behave under
certain circumstances. Norms are generally connected to the values, beliefs, and ideologies of a
society. Norms vary in terms of their importance to a culture, these are:
Folkways: Norms guiding ordinary usages and conventions of everyday life are known
as folkways. Folkways are norms that are not strictly enforced, such as not leaving your seat for
an elderly people inside a bus/taxi. They may result in a person getting a bad look.
Mores: Mores (pronounced mor-ays) are much stronger norms than are folkways. Mores
are norms that are believed to be essential to core values and we insist on conformity. A person
who steals, rapes, and kills has violated some of society’s most important mores. People who
violate mores are usually severely punished, although punishment for the violation of mores
varies from society to society. It may take the form of ostracism, vicious gossip, public ridicule,
exile, loss of one’s job, physical beating, imprisonment, commitment to a mental asylum, or even
execution.
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V. EVALUATING CULTURAL DIFFERENCES: ETHNOCENTRISM AND CULTURAL
RELATIVISM.
1. Ethnocentrism
We tend to judge other cultures in terms of the values and customs of our culture. Being fond of
your own way of life and condescending or even being hostile toward other cultures is normal
for all people. Ethnocentrism refers to the tendency of considering beliefs, values, and norms of
our group/culture as the only right way of living and to judge others by those standards. Because
of ethnocentrism, we often operate on the premise that our own society’s ways are the correct,
normal and better ways for acting, thinking, feeling and behaving. Our own group is the center of
everything, and we scale and rate all others with reference to it. Ethnocentrism is a cultural
universal. Alien cultural traits are often viewed as being not just different but inferior, less
sensible, and even "unnatural”.
Ethnocentrism results in prejudices about people from other cultures and the rejection of their
ways of life. Ethnocentrism can prevent us from understanding and appreciating other cultures.
When there is contact with people from other cultures, ethnocentrism can prevent open
communication and result in misunderstanding and mistrust. This would be highly
counterproductive for businessmen trying to negotiate a trade deal, professionals who work in
areas other than their own or even just neighbors trying to get along with each other.
The positive aspect of ethnocentrism has to do with the protection it provide for a culture. By
causing a rejection of the foods, customs, and perceptions of people in other cultures, it acts as a
conservative force in preserving traditions of one's own culture. It can help maintain the
separation and uniqueness of cultures.
2. Cultural relativism
We cannot grasp the behavior of other people if we interpret what they say and do in the light of
our values, beliefs, and motives. Instead, we need to examine their behavior as insiders, seeing it
within the context of their values, beliefs and motives. Cultural relativism states that cultures
differ, so we need to understand the meaning of a cultural trait, activity, or idea within its cultural
setting.
Cultural relativism suspends judgment and views about the behavior of people from the
perspective of their own culture. Every society has its own culture, which is more or less unique.
Every culture contains its own unique pattern of behavior which may seem alien to people from
other cultural backgrounds. We cannot understand the practices and beliefs separately from the
wider culture of which they are part. A culture has to be studied in terms of its own meanings
and values. Cultural relativism describes a situation where there is an attitude of respect for
cultural differences rather than condemning other people's culture as uncivilized or backward.
Respect for cultural differences involves:
o Appreciating cultural diversity;
o Accepting and respecting other cultures;
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o Trying to understand every culture and its elements in terms of its own context
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4. Globalization
The term globalization encompasses a series of processes, including diffusion and acculturation,
working to promote change across the world. Promoting such linkages are economic and
political forces, as well as modem systems of transportation and communication. Due to
globalization, long-distance communication is easier, faster, and cheaper than ever, and extends
to remote areas. The mass media help propel a globally spreading culture of consumption.
Within nations and across their borders, the media spread information about products, services,
rights, institutions, and lifestyles. Emigrants transmit information and resources transnationally,
as they maintain their ties with home (phoning, faxing, e-mailing, making visits, and sending
money). In a sense such people live multi-locally-in different places and cultures at once. They
learn to play various social roles and to change behavior and identity depending on the situation.
Brainstorming questions:
What is the relationship between culture change and economic growth and development?
Is it possible to achieve development without a significant level of change in certain areas
of culture?
How do/did countries such as Japan accelerate revolutionary changes from
feudal/rural/agrarian culture to industrial/urban/modern culture?
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areas constitute enset culture area. In this region, enset serves as a staple diet to the people who
make use the plant in a wide variety of forms for a living.
3. Pastoral culture area
Pastoral culture area is found in the low land areas covering a large section of the Afar in the
northwest, Somali in the southeast and Borena of southern of Ethiopia. As opposed to the above
the cases, inhabitants of the pastoral culture area rely significantly on their herds and cattle for a
living. Mobility of people and herds is a major characteristic feature of the people occupying the
pastoral culture area.
Reflect your views on the following question
1. Search for anthropological findings/studies in your library focusing on plough culture,
enset culture and pastoral culture areas in Ethiopia. Summarize the finding of scholars in
a group of five students and present the result of you work in class to your instructor and
students.
2. How do you explain the pattern of historical interaction between the different culture-
areas of the country discussed in this unit?
3. What other culture areas can identify in the country in addition to the above three types?